Western Internet firms "act as censors" in China
By Lindsay Beck

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060810/wr_nm/china_internet_dc_1

BEIJING (Reuters) - A rights group accused Western Internet companies on 
Thursday of complicity with censorship in China and called on Microsoft 
Corp., Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc to resist Beijing's demands.

New York-based Human Rights Watch called the blocking of politically 
sensitive Web sites and search terms "arbitrary, opaque and 
unaccountable" and urged the publicly traded firms to be upfront with 
their users about censorship.

"It was ironic that companies whose existence depends on freedom of 
information and expression have taken on the role of censor, even in 
cases where the Chinese government makes no specific demands for them to 
do so," the group said in a report.

The report was the latest in a wave of criticism against Western 
Internet companies operating in China, which are accused of compromising 
their principles by censoring searches and blog titles and blocking 
politically sensitive terms in order do to business in the world's 
number-two Internet market.

In the case of Yahoo, the company has also been accused of providing 
information to Chinese authorities that led to the imprisonment of 
people accused of political crimes. The most prominent among them is 
writer Shi Tao, who was jailed for 10 years for leaking state secrets 
abroad.

Human Rights Watch was also especially critical of Yahoo's search 
functions, saying it censored information about as much as domestic 
search engine Baidu.com Inc..

Yahoo said it was "deeply concerned" about the issues but that it 
believed its presence in China was valuable.

"We believe we can make more of a difference by having even a limited 
presence and growing our influence than we can by not operating in a 
particular country at all," said Yahoo spokeswoman Mary Osako.

CURRYING FAVOR

Google, whose motto is "Don't Be Evil," has also come under fire for 
blocking politically sensitive terms on its China site www.google.cn, 
bowing to conditions set by Beijing, while Microsoft has shut down blogs 
hosted on its MSN Spaces.

Microsoft in China and Google in the United States did not immediately 
reply to e-mails and phone calls seeking their comments on the report.

Human Rights Watch also criticised Web telephone company Skype, saying 
its Chinese software was configured to censor sensitive words in text 
chats without informing the user.

"Yahoo's role in the Shi Tao case and Google's decision to turn censor 
in order to curry favor with the Chinese government show the extent of 
corporate capitulation to China," Human Rights Watch Asia director Brad 
Adams said in a statement.

The group urged the companies to use "all legal means" to resist 
censorship of searches, blogs and Web addresses.

It also recommended a series of policies for the companies to adhere to 
when operating in China, including informing users when searches have 
been censored, storing user data that could be used to identify 
subscribers outside of the country and not complying with oral or 
undocumented requests from Chinese authorities.

Human Rights Watch researchers found that all of the companies censored 
sensitive searches, including terms related to the controversial 1989 
crackdown on student demonstrators in and around Tiananmen Square, and the
Falun Gong spiritual movement, which China has banned as an "evil cult."


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